Saturday, August 10, 2019

Moss piglets in spaaaaaaaace!

(With apologies to The Muppet Show.)

 

It's a little fascinating when something pops up in my current events news feed that actually resolves unanswered questions from Star Trek - life imitating art, as it were.

Apparently back in April, Israel Aerospace Industry's Beresheet* lunar mission crashed-landed on the Moon.  Along with a sample of human blood and a 30-million page archive of human history, the probe contained several thousand microscopic tardigrades, also known as water bears or moss piglets, one of the toughest organisms in existence.**  Tardigrades have already proven that they are capable of surviving exposure to space, and in this case they were dehydrated - which placed them in a state of suspended animation - and then protectively encased in artificial amber.

 


Fast forward 237 years**, and boom, we have a captive giant space tardigrade manipulating space using the mycelial network spore drive on the USS Discovery.  Well, at least now we know why it's a tardigrade - the next question is how it got to be so damned BIG.

 - Sid 

* Hebrew for "In a beginning" - the first word of the Torah.

** If you're wondering why any of this would be on a moon mission , there's a group called the Arch Mission Foundation that wanted to create a backup of Terran lifeforms, history and knowledge. 

*** According to the Memory Alpha Star Trek database, the events of Season One of Discovery take place between 2256-2258 AD.




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